The Guardian (USA)

Seiji Ozawa obituary

- Barry Millington

Seiji Ozawa, who has died aged 88, was one of the leading conductors of his generation. Though his place in the pantheon of truly great conductors was questionab­le, Ozawa was for several decades a major player on the internatio­nal scene and a figure of some historical significan­ce on several counts.

He was, to begin with, the first conductor from Japan to achieve recognitio­n in the west, the only one to date to attain superstar status, the longest serving music director of the Boston Symphony Orchestra (1973-2002) and one of the longest serving of any American orchestra. He had a prodigious memory and habitually conducted with the score unopened in front of him.

With his shock of black (latterly grey) hair, modish dress sense (particular­ly in his younger days, when he favoured flowery shirts and cowboy boots and, on the stage, a rollnecked sweater rather than a dressshirt) and balletic podium movements, he attracted attention from his first engagement­s in America in the 1960s. But many critics felt that his musicmakin­g was similarly characteri­sed by glossiness and superficia­lity, notwithsta­nding some notable landmarks in his career and a commitment to the training of artists of the future.

If the performanc­es of his early years were characteri­sed by highoctane energy, those of the later period, perhaps seeking the elusive soul of the music, too often adopted vitality-sapping slow tempi and flaccid rhythms.

Ozawa was born in Shenyang, China. His parents were Japanese, and having begun music lessons at the age of seven, he entered the Toho School of Music in Tokyo when he was 16. Though initially studying piano, he broke both index fingers while playing rugby and turned instead to conducting and compositio­n. He gained valuable experience with profession­al ensembles such as the NHK Symphony Orchestra and Japan Philharmon­ic while still a student and won first prizes in both discipline­s.

Graduating in 1959, he emigrated to Europe to pursue further studies, supporting himself meanwhile as a travelling salesman of Japanese motor scooters. He won first prize in the internatio­nal conductors’ competitio­n at Besançon, eastern France (1959) and so impressed Charles Munch, one of the judges, that he invited him to the US, to the Berkshire Music Center at Tanglewood, Massachuse­tts, the following year, where he was able to study with both Munch and Monteux.

Having then taken the prestigiou­s Koussevitz­ky award (1960), Ozawa won a scholarshi­p to study with Herbert von Karajan in Berlin. It was there that he was spotted by Leonard Bernstein, who offered him a post as an assistant conductor with the New York Philharmon­ic (1961-65).

Ozawa’s career took off at this point, with a Carnegie Hall début in 1961, an invitation to conduct the San Francisco Symphony Orchestra in 1962, and engagement­s with the Chicago Symphony Orchestra, culminatin­g in the artistic directorsh­ip of the Ravinia festival (1964-68) and the music directorsh­ip of the Toronto Symphony Orchestra (1965-69). During this period he made an impression with the brilliance of his interpreta­tions, with his supreme command of the most intimidati­ngly complex scores and as a graceful, even glamorous stage performer.

Describing the first time he saw Ozawa conduct the Boston Symphony in 1965, the critic Michael Steinberg noted “an incredible current of energy that seemed to begin in the small of the back and flow up the spine and across the shoulders, along the arms, through the hands all the way to the point of the stick, and into the air beyond. It was a beautiful thing to watch.”

In 1970 Ozawa was appointed music director of the San Francisco Symphony Orchestra, a post he held until 1976. A commitment to new music was evident in these years, not least in the commission­ing of works such as György Ligeti’s San Francisco Polyphony (1975). Also in 1970 he became co-artistic director, with Gunther Schuller, of the Berkshire music festival, taking sole control in 1973, the year in which he also became music director of the Boston Symphony Orchestra.

The three-decade-long tenure in Boston was riven with controvers­y. His admirers point to the sense of confidence he built in the musicians: a delight in their own virtuosity. He is also credited with creating a darker, more

Germanic sound colour, suitable for the mainstream repertoire of Beethoven, Brahms and Mahler, as opposed to the French-flavoured tone developed over previous decades. His detractors criticised his frequent absences abroad and, more seriously, questioned his credential­s as a top-flight conductor.

In the mid-90s a newsletter, Counterpoi­nt, produced by a dissident group of BSO musicians, commented that Ozawa gave no “specific leadership in matters of tempo and rhythm”, offered no “expression of care about sound quality” and even failed to share any “distinctly conveyed conception of the character of each piece the BSO plays”. Orchestral musicians are notorious for bad-mouthing their conductors, but the Counterpoi­nt contributo­rs included both the concertmas­ter and principal cellist. Moreover, they reflected reservatio­ns expressed in the internatio­nal press – and occasional­ly by the public.

A performanc­e of Idomeneo at Salzburg in 1990, for example, was roundly booed, while few recordings of this period achieved anything like benchmark status. Some recordings, however, were better received. That of Honegger’s Jeanne d’Arc au Bûcher (1991) was praised for its rhythmic vitality and for its delineatio­n of the distinctiv­e qualities of the score, while a staged version, released on video, of Stravinsky’s Oedipus Rex won multiple awards. Ozawa’s recording of Messiaen’s opera St François d’Assise (1983) – a work he premiered – was regarded as a huge achievemen­t and magnificen­tly atmospheri­c.

In 1984 Ozawa was instrument­al in the founding of the Saito Kinen Orchestra, an ensemble of distinguis­hed Japanese musicians, gathered in tribute to the educationi­st Hideo Saito (Ozawa was one of his many pupils).

A number of high-quality performanc­es and recordings emanated from their periodic reunions and eventually, in 1992, the Saito Kinen festival was establishe­d in Matsumoto (now known as the Seiji Ozawa Matsumoto festival). The festival is oversubscr­ibed by many times each year and is regarded as a prestige event. Ozawa’s experience as a mentor, as well as his interest in opera, were also exploited at the Tanglewood summer festival, where he resurrecte­d an operatic component.

That predilecti­on for opera was reinforced in 2002 by his appointmen­t as music director of the Vienna State Opera and in 2005 by his simultaneo­us artistic directorsh­ip of the new Tokyo Opera Nomori. A number of performanc­es had to be cancelled in

Vienna and Paris in 2006 on health grounds. In 2010 he was diagnosed with oesophagea­l cancer. He attempted a comeback in April 2016, conducting the Berlin Philharmon­ic in the capital’s Philharmon­ie and the orchestra of the Seiji Ozawa Internatio­nal Academy, Switzerlan­d (founded by him in 2004), in Paris, but was forced to pull out of an engagement with the Boston Symphony that July, lacking the strength to conduct.

In November 2022 he returned to the stage, looking very frail in a wheelchair, to conduct the Saito Kinen Orchestra in a live broadcast to outer space. In collaborat­ion with the Japan Aerospace Exploratio­n Agency (JAXA), a performanc­e of Beethoven’s Egmont Overture was sent to the astronaut Koichi Wakata on the Internatio­nal Space Station.

In 2016 he published a book of conversati­ons with the novelist Haruki Murakami under the title Absolutely on Music.

His first marriage, to the pianist Kyoko Edo, ended in divorce. With his second wife, Vera Ilyan, he had two children, Seira and Yukiyoshi, who survive him.

• Seiji Ozawa, conductor, born 1 September 1935; died 6 February 2024

 ?? Photograph: Ali Schafler/AP ?? Seiji Ozawa directing the traditiona­l New Year's concert of the Vienna Philharmon­ic orchestra in the golden hall of the Musikverei­n in Vienna in 2002.
Photograph: Ali Schafler/AP Seiji Ozawa directing the traditiona­l New Year's concert of the Vienna Philharmon­ic orchestra in the golden hall of the Musikverei­n in Vienna in 2002.

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